In 1872 William Bow and John McLachlan founded the company at Abbotsinch, Renfrewshire, where it made steering gear and light marine steam engines.[1] In 1900 the company expanded into the building of small ships by taking over J. McArthur & Co's Thistle Works and shipyard at Paisley, also in Renfrewshire.[1] The expanded undertaking became a limited liability company at the same time.[1]
Bow, McLachlan & Co. entered the specialist market for "knock down" vessels.[1] These were bolted together at the shipyard, all the parts marked with numbers, disassembled into many hundreds of parts and transported in kit form for final reassembly with rivets. This elaborate method of construction was used to provide inland shipping for export, or for lakes that had no navigable link with the open sea. The company supplied a number of "knock down" ships to the Uganda Railway for service on Lake Victoria, including the passenger and cargo sister shipsSybil and Winifred (1901), the larger Clement Hill (1905) and cargo shipNyanza (1907).
In 1920 the company went into voluntary liquidation but was reconstituted as a new company with the same name.[1] Also in 1920 the company built the steam yacht Volo for its co-founder William Bow. In the 1920s Bow, Maclachlan supplied export orders from countries including Australia, Greece, India[1] and Portugal. At the beginning of the 1930s the company supplied export orders including a class of six tugs for the Chilean Navy.[1]
Several Bow, MacLachlan ships survive around the World. The veteran cargo ship Nyanza and cargo and passenger ship Rusinga on Lake Victoria were reported to have survived into the 21st century, now trading in private ownership. One UK Admiralty Moor class mooring vessel, HMDYC Moorstone, continues in civilian service as the Turkish-registered Çıkaran. The paddle steamerSudan (1921) was restored in 2001 and continues in tourist service on the River Nile. The pilot boatJohn Oxley (1927) is preserved in Sydney, New South Wales. The tug Colo Colo is preserved in Punta Arenas, Chile and the paddle tug John H Amos (also 1931) is preserved at Chatham Historic Dockyard, England.
References
^ abcdefghijk"Bow, McLachlan and Co". Grace's Guide: The Best of British Engineering 1750–1960s. 29 January 2009. Retrieved 22 May 2011.